Managers can find useful resources below for employee’s volunteering as WashU Wellness Champions.
WashU Well-being is WashU’s wellness program. It is designed to enable a healthy mind and body.
WashU strives to provide a valuable employee experience – one that includes resources and programs to help employees thrive at work and outside of work.
In partnership with University experts, WashU Well-being offers opportunities for employees to improve their physical, emotional, and financial wellness. We do this with a specific focus on developing evidence-based programs and by making personal connections that provide employees with valuable and fun experiences to improve health.
Our vision is to foster a culture that prioritizes employee well-being as integral to the mission of teaching, research and patient care.
Learn more online.
WashU Wellness Champions are WashU employees interested in fostering a culture of wellness in the workplace.
Champions work with WashU Well-being to personalize the employee wellness experience by:
- Talking with colleagues and supervisors to understand their department’s unique needs;
- Innovating well-being ideas and sponsoring well-being activities within their departments;
- Communicating well-being initiatives to colleagues and encouraging them to participate;
- Providing feedback on existing programs, which influences future programming;
- Utilizing the tools and resources provided by WashU Well-being to encourage participation and engagement from their colleagues.
Champions may renew their membership on an annual basis.
Learn more at hr.wustl.edu/items/wellness-champions
Any active WashU employee who meets the following criteria can volunteer as a Wellness Champion:
- Passionate about a healthy workplace culture;
- In good standing with the University and their department;
- Completed the new-hire 6-month probationary period;
- Participates in WashU Well-being programming;
- Supports university initiatives and assists the Wellness team in meeting program goals;
- Has the support of their supervisor and attends the annual WashU Wellness Champion Summit.
Time commitment can vary based on how involved you want to be. Generally, Champions can expect to dedicate 1-3 hours a month to their role:
Monthly | Annually |
Read & share newsletter Post flyers Participate in wellness programs | Attend the WashU Wellness Champion Summit Renew membership Complete Champion Engagement Survey Meet with the WashU Well-being team to personalize wellness for your department Optional: host a dedicated screening event or invite the HR Well-being team to speak to your department |
Yes. Several departments have more than one champion and find that having multiple perspectives results in a richer, more diverse experience. Multiple champions can work together to personalize wellness for their department by:
- Balancing the internal needs of your department while supporting WashU campus-wide wellness priorities.
- Partnering in efforts to begin wellness initiatives in your department.
A healthy employee is a happy, engaged employee:
- Research shows that a strong culture of health and wellness has been linked to organizational outcomes such as improved employee health, productivity, and retention;
- Employees who are engaged and thriving also have greater agility and resilience – they are better able to react well to stress; and
- Wellness Champions can help a manager identify the needs of their office and work with WashU Well-being to offer feasible solutions, resulting in a more engaged and productive workforce.
Supporting the University’s wellness program can be a great way to send prospective employees a message as a way to attract and retain top talent and show that you care about your employees.
Different departments, job types, and levels within the organization have different experiences and interests. Your Champion represents your department and can tailor the employee wellness experience to fit your employees.
Supporting Data
According to Lamar Pierce, WashU Professor of Organization & Strategy and Associate Dean for Olin-Brookings Partnership:
“When you give people the tools and the opportunity to be physically and mentally healthier, it’s not just that they’re more likely to be at work, those employees are also more likely to be productive”.
Dr. Bradley Evanoff, Director of the Division of General Medical Sciences, is studying the use of a participatory approach for engaging workers in the design of health promotion interventions. Using human-centered design, the participatory teams are tasked with creating a workplace that better supports their health. Early research findings indicate that creating an effective participatory health team in your department could help workers feel positively towards the workplace: increasing job satisfaction, reducing turnover, and improving both business and health outcomes.
Executive leadership has the power to affect a top-down cultural change within their departments. Deans and Directors can show their support to middle management and employees by:
- Working with supervisors to accommodate employee participation in Champion activities during the workday;
- Announcing this volunteer opportunity and notifying your employees & supervisors you would like a Champion(s) in your department; and
- Identifying teams or groups where you think a Champion would be beneficial and provide WashU Well-being with a supervisor contact there.
By participating in and talking about wellness opportunities, you foster a culture of health and well-being within your department. Show your support by:
- Participating in WashU Well-being programming;
- Encouraging your employees and colleagues to participate; and
- Make it easy for your employees to engage by accommodating their schedules as much as possible to allow them to participate during the workday.
- Employee Engagement: Conceptual Issues (PDF) Journal of Organizational Culture, Communications and Conflict
- Think Health St. Louis: St. Louis Partnership for a Healthy Community Think Health St. Louis
- Perceptions of worksite support and employee obesity, activity, and diet. American Journal of Health Behavior